Thursday, June 25, 2026

WHILE HEATWAVE SWEEPS FRANCE, RELUCTANCE TO INSTALL AIR-CONDITIONER CONTINUES


                                         
( An employee  setting  right AC of the restaurant in France ) 
                       ( Old building without ACs)


Why Air Conditioning Still Meets Resistance in France


For most of the 20th century, France had little use for it. Summers were mild, heatwaves were brief, and buildings were engineered to hold warmth, not shed it. The cultural response became instinctive: lower the shutters, close the curtains, turn on a fan, and wait it out. Air conditioning arrived as something foreign , a heavy-handed, American answer to a seasonal inconvenience. That instinct has settled into five enduring reasons:


1. Environmental concern


AC draws significant power and expels heat into the street. In a country that takes pride in low-carbon electricity and ecological awareness, widespread air conditioning can feel like a contradiction , private comfort at public cost.


2. Deep-rooted health worries

 

La climatisation is widely blamed for colds, stiff necks, sore throats and general malaise. The evidence is thin, but the belief runs deep. Cold, dry air is culturally coded as unhealthy, even aggressive.


3. Noise and the look of the city


Portable units drone. Fixed compressors blemish Haussmann façades and spark disputes within the copropriété. In a culture that treats visual harmony and quiet as civic values, AC is an intrusion.


4. Buildings that fight it 


Thick stone walls, wooden shutters, listed facades, awkward windows. The Parisian apartment was built for winter. Installing AC means cutting into protected architecture, and the permissions process is formidable.


5. The ethic of restraint


There is a quiet suspicion of comfort that comes too easily. To endure the heat is seen as stoic, measured, responsible. To fit AC can feel like a concession , a choice of convenience over character. “We manage without it” remains a point of pride.


The context, however, is changing. Heatwaves are longer, stronger, and more frequent. The same buildings that once preserved winter heat now trap summer temperatures to dangerous levels. For infants, older residents, and those under the roof, “managing without” is shifting from virtue to risk. The real question is no longer whether to use AC, but how  keeping a room at 26°C rather than 19°C, using it judiciously instead of reflexively. 


The French resistance to air conditioning is rooted in history, architecture, and a particular sense of measure. But when summers hit 40°C, culture meets physics. And physics does not negotiate.


( Avtar Mota )



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Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

ANALYSING A COUPLET OF POET FIRAQ GORAKHPURI

                                         



ANALYSING A COUPLET OF POET FIRAQ GORAKHPURI


"Shiv ka Vishpaan tau suna hoga,

Me bhi aey dost pee gaya aansoo.."


(You have heard of Shiva drinking poison,  

I too, my friend, swallowed my tears.)



The couplet stages a deliberate movement from the mythic to the mundane, from cosmology to phenomenology. In Puranic theology, Shiva’s Vishpaan during the Samudra Manthan is a paradigmatic act of Lokasangraha: the voluntary assumption of toxicity to preserve cosmic order. It is public, transfiguring, and teleologically resolved. Firaq re-inscribes this archetype within the register of lived, quotidian experience. The  Vish becomes Aansoo. The site of ingestion shifts from the divine throat to the human interior. This is a philosophical demotion of scale but an elevation of ethical significance. The couplet posits that private endurance constitutes its own mode of theodicy, one that lacks a witnessing public or a redemptive narrative.


Ethics of Unspectacular Sacrifice


Within the Indic ethical tradition, Tyaga is often hierarchised: the King’s renunciation differs from the ascetic’s, the martyr’s from the householder’s. Firaq collapses this hierarchy. By juxtaposing Shiva’s cosmic act with the swallowing of tears, he articulates what might be termed a democratised metaphysics of suffering. The interlocutor ,"aey dost"  is forced into a moral comparison: the veneration accorded to mythic sacrifice versus the invisibility granted to personal grief. The couplet thus functions as an ethical critique of cultural memory. Societies canonise the spectacular and overlook the interstitial suffering that sustains them. In this sense, Firaq anticipates later critiques of “history from below” and the feminist revaluation of affective labour.


 Aesthetics of Understatement and the Urdu Tahzeeb


The verb  'pee gaya' is casual, almost resigned. There is no  pride in the act, only a factual reportage. This understatement is philosophically significant. It refuses the Nietzschean ressentiment that converts suffering into grievance, and also refuses the Stoic demand that suffering be transcended. Instead, it records a third position: suffering is metabolised, held within the body, and not converted into social or spiritual capital. This is a uniquely modern subjectivity, where the self becomes the sole witness to its own pain.


Intertextuality and Civilisational Dialogue


The couplet  gains further depth when read against the Kashmiri context . The Vishpaan of 1990 was not consumed by political actors but by ordinary sufferers who “pee gaye aansoo” in order to save their lives and honour , educate their children, and maintain cultural continuity . Firaq, though not Kashmiri, provides a poetic grammar for that historical condition. Philosophically, this aligns with Simone Weil’s notion of  Malheur,  affliction that is impersonal and destructive of the self, and with Kashmiri Shaiva ideas of  Swatantrya, wherein the divine freely contracts itself into limitation. The subject of the couplet enacts that contraction: he becomes a Neelkantha without devotees.


Epistemology of the Unspeakable


Finally, the couplet interrogates what can be known and transmitted. “Shiv ka Vishpaan tau suna hoga” acknowledges  the story as Shruti (what is heard and circulated) . “Me bhi… pee gaya aansoo” points to what remains  Ashruti (unheard, un-archived) . The poem thus marks the boundary between cultural memory and experiential oblivion. Philosophically, it poses a question of justice: can a civilisation be called just if its moral accounting recognises only legible, spectacular sacrifice?


In sum, Firaq’s  couplet is not merely lyrical. It is a compressed treatise on the ethics of memory, the politics of recognition, and the metaphysics of ordinary endurance.  Firaq’s couplet shifts the site of the sacred from public institutions to private endurance, locating holiness not in  structures of faith or rituals but in the tears a person silently swallows. In doing so, it confronts a historiography that equates audibility with importance, arguing that official records of noise, speeches, events, and headlines, will always overlook the substance of a civilisation. That substance lies in unspectacular acts of survival that leave no archive: the grief absorbed in solitude, the duties performed without witness, the culture sustained without recognition.


( Avtar Mota )


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LES INVALIDES , PARIS : A LIVING MONUMENT OF MILITARY HISTORY , MEMORY , AND STATE POWER

                                                                             



                                                                               

                                                                         (Napoleon's Coffin ) 
                                                                             



( Avtar Mota looking from the top of Montparnasse Tower , Paris




Les Invalides, Paris: A Living Monument of Military History, Memory, and State Power

 At the heart of Paris’s Left Bank stands Les Invalides, a vast golden-domed complex that is at once a monument, a museum, a hospital and an active military institution. To the casual visitor, it may appear as one of the city’s more imposing historic landmarks, yet its meaning has never been confined to spectacle. It is a place where architecture, state power and social welfare were fused into a single instrument of governance, and where that original synthesis continues, uneasily but visibly, into the present.

                                          

 Founded in 1670 by Louis XIV as the Hotel Royal des Invalides, the complex emerged from a distinctly absolutist logic: the monarchy as both sovereign power and paternal caretaker. France in the late seventeenth century was a state in constant military motion. The wars of expansion that defined the Sun King’s reign produced not only victories and territorial gains but also a growing population of wounded, disabled and impoverished soldiers. Many of them drifted into Paris, forming a visible and politically troubling underclass of uniformed beggars. For Louis XIV, this was not merely a humanitarian issue but a question of royal image and urban order. The creation of Les Invalides was therefore both welfare policy and political theatre: a means of removing the “failed” bodies of war from public view while simultaneously staging the monarchy’s responsibility toward those same bodies.

 Designed initially by Liberal Bruant and later refined and expanded by Jules Hardouin-Mansart, the institution opened in 1674 as a self-contained military city. It was conceived to house thousands of veterans, but also to discipline them; physically, morally and spatially. Workshops were established so that residents could continue to work in trades such as weaving, cobbling and engraving, reinforcing the ideal of productive retirement rather than passive dependency. In this sense, the early Hotel des Invalides functioned as an embryonic form of state welfare, though one deeply embedded in hierarchical discipline. Care was inseparable from control. Architecturally, Les Invalides is a statement of classical absolutism. Its geometry is governed by symmetry, axial order and monumental scale. The Cour d’Honneur, stretching more than 100 metres, acts as a ceremonial void around which military life is organised. It was here that drills, inspections and displays of royal authority took place, transforming the courtyard into a space where the body of the soldier became an instrument of visual discipline. The most striking feature, however, is the Église du Dome, designed by Mansart as a chapel for the king and court. Its gilded dome, rising over 100 metres above Paris, is not simply decorative but ideological. Inspired by Roman and Renaissance precedents yet distinctly French in its clarity and restraint, it signals the transformation of Baroque grandeur into a controlled language of state power. The dome’s interior amplifies this effect: gilded coffering, painted heavens and carefully staged sightlines direct the visitor’s gaze upward, producing a vertical hierarchy that mirrors the political order of absolutist France. Below, the Église Saint-Louis-des-Invalides serves as a more austere counterpoint, reinforcing the social division between rank-and-file soldiers and elite spectatorship.

 Over time, the meaning of the complex shifted with the political ruptures of France itself. During the Revolution, the institution’s royal associations became problematic. Although the site continued to house veterans, its symbolic role was destabilised as the monarchy collapsed and new republican ideals redefined the relationship between citizen and soldier. The Napoleonic era, however, restored and radically transformed its significance. Under Napoleon Bonaparte, the military became the central institution of the French state, and Les Invalides was reabsorbed into a new imperial mythology. The site began to accumulate artefacts, trophies and commemorative meanings that tied individual military sacrifice to national destiny.

 This process reached its most theatrical expression in 1840 with the “retour des cendres,” the return of Napoleon’s remains from exile on Saint Helena. Orchestrated by King Louis-Philippe as a gesture of political reconciliation, the event transformed the complex into a national mausoleum. Architect Louis Visconti redesigned the crypt beneath the dome, placing Napoleon’s red quartzite sarcophagus in a sunken circular chamber that forces visitors into a slow orbital movement above the tomb. The effect is deliberately ambivalent: reverence and surveillance are merged into a single spatial experience. Napoleon is simultaneously elevated as a national hero and enclosed within a controlled architectural frame. This transformation also reflects broader nineteenth-century shifts in the politics of memory. The site became a repository not only for imperial legacy but for competing narratives of French military identity. Marshals of the Empire, revolutionary generals and later military figures were gradually incorporated into its symbolic structure, turning the complex into a layered pantheon of martial history.

 The development of the Musée de l’Armée in 1905 formalised this accumulation of memory. Formed through the merger of earlier artillery and historical collections, the museum systematised centuries of military material culture into a chronological narrative of French warfare. Its medieval galleries display armour as both craft and ideology—objects that were once functional but also deeply symbolic, marking the social stratification of feudal Europe. The galleries of the ‘Ancien Régime’ and Napoleonic periods chart the evolution of the French state into a centralised military machine, while the twentieth-century sections confront the traumatic realities of industrialised war. The First and Second World Wars occupy a particularly significant place within this narrative. Rather than presenting a triumphalist account, the museum foregrounds trench conditions, resistance activity and the bureaucratic machinery of total war. Reconstructed environments- trenches, command rooms, and occupied offices function as immersive devices that disrupt the aesthetic distance of traditional military display. In doing so, the museum reflects a broader European shift in the interpretation of conflict: from heroic narrative to critical memory.

 This interpretative approach aligns with modern theories of collective memory, particularly the idea that sites such as Les Invalides function as what historian Pierre Nora termed “lieux de memoire”, places where memory is anchored because lived experience has otherwise disappeared. Within this framework, Les Invalides is not simply a preserved historical site but an active mechanism for producing national memory. It stabilises competing interpretations of France’s military past within a single architectural and institutional framework. Yet what distinguishes Les Invalides from many other European monuments is that it has never ceased to function as an operational military institution. The Institution Nationale des Invalides continues to provide medical care and rehabilitation for wounded soldiers. Veterans reside within its walls, supported by medical staff and military administration. Chapels remain active, and ceremonial events mark both historical anniversaries and contemporary military engagements. The presence of uniformed personnel within the same courtyards that once hosted seventeenth-century drills creates a rare continuity between absolutist, imperial and republican France. In the modern city, the Esplanade des Invalides extends this continuity into urban space. Once a parade ground, it now functions as a public park and ceremonial axis connecting the Left Bank to the broader geometry of Paris. Its alignment toward the Seine and its visual dialogue with other monumental axes, such as the Champ de Mars, reinforce the city’s long-standing identity as a capital organised through state sightlines and controlled vistas. Even in its contemporary, recreational use, the space retains the logic of visibility and order embedded in its original design.

 During the twentieth century, Les Invalides also became a site of national commemoration for both world wars and later military engagements. State funerals, commemorative ceremonies and military parades frequently pass through its courtyards, reaffirming its role as a stage for republican ritual. In this sense, the complex has absorbed the symbolic functions of monarchy, empire and republic without fully relinquishing any of them. It operates as a palimpsest of French political identity, where successive regimes have inscribed their own meanings onto a stable architectural framework. The endurance of Les Invalides therefore lies not in its preservation as a static monument, but in its capacity to remain institutionally alive. It is simultaneously a museum of war, a tomb of empire, a hospital for veterans and a ceremonial centre of the French state. Few sites in Europe so completely fuse the material, symbolic and operational dimensions of military history.

 Ultimately, what the complex reveals is that military memory is never neutral. It is constructed, curated and spatialised through architecture, ritual and institutional practice. Les Invalides does not simply remember France’s military past; it organises it, stages it and continues to inhabit it. In doing so, it offers a rare continuity across three centuries of profound political change, standing in Paris not only as a monument to what France has been, but as an active participant in how it continues to define itself.

 

( Avtar Mota )


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Tuesday, June 23, 2026

WHEN ALL ARE LEADERS

                                     

         

WHEN ALL ARE LEADERS


The disturbing  sign of a leaderless group is when  every member scrambles to lead at once, a condition now visible in the Kashmiri Pandit community where too many leaders have cropped up, fracturing advocacy and creating hurdles in the projection of issues through one unified voice. This produces what Max Weber saw as a vacuum of authority and what Hannah Arendt might call the banality of misrule ,  a cacophony where decisions dissolve, responsibility belongs to no one, and external dispensations withdraw because no institution backs a cause with ten rudders and no helm. 


A leaderless group is usually manipulated by establishment, for where sovereignty is absent, subtler regimes of control advance to occupy the space, as Michel Foucault observed. Press conferences, media interviews,events.  lectures and assemblies not backed by a single voice are useless, multiplying noise while diluting moral weight; and those who truly feel the pain of human beings rarely need these platforms. They must serve, sacrifice and lead with egoless sincerity, for any community or group  where all are leaders can rarely achieve its objectives, since collective ambition without hierarchy breeds contention, not redress. 


A leader needs time and encouragement to be tested and tried; a test deficit in every person does not create leaders who shape the future, because, as Arnold Toynbee argued, civilisations advance only through the ordeal of challenge and response. And  leaders today tend to be more media-cautious than rooted in service and sacrifice, curating image where once they courted risk, a shift Neil Postman foreshadowed when he warned that we would amuse ourselves to death rather than govern ourselves through duty. 


True leadership is intellectualism made ethical: Plato’s philosopher-king and James MacGregor Burns’ “moral risk” of choice, the rare capacity to translate thought into direction while bearing blame and dispersing credit, because as T.S. Eliot noted, humankind cannot bear very much reality and needs someone to bear it for them. Such selflessness is scarce, and history’s few exemplars like Cincinnatus or Dag Hammarskjöld prove that only those who willingly give power away truly deserve it. Without that one architect of will, nurtured through trial and trust rather than teleprompters, the Kashmiri Pandit cause risks remaining unattended by fortune, eloquent in grief but starved of command, its legitimate claims diffused by too many voices and claimed by none.


The leadership landscape for Kashmiri Pandits has by and large been broadly reduced to two dispiriting categories : Event Managers who barter community interest for ministerial photo opportunities and political patronage, Press Release aficionados who mistake column inches and televised outrage for tangible change, whilst the existential imperatives of dignified return, secure rehabilitation, youth employment, temple property restoration, residential property restoration , grant of justice to the families of innocents killed by terrorists , confronting the fake narratives of vested interests, meaningful political representation and many more get quietly shelved; in this calculus of optics over outcomes, rhetoric masquerades as responsibility and roadmap, and community interest is sacrificed at the altar of self-interest, and performative piety. Isn't there a thirty-six year delay in achieving our desired objectives ?


Yet the fragmentation of political elites and their inability to articulate a unified platform has thrown into relief a parallel, non-statist locus of resilience. The community’s post-1990 survival has been underwritten by a diffuse network of civil society workers whose Nishkaam-service constitutes a significant, if under-theorised, form of civilisational agency. Without recourse to publicity or state patronage, these individuals established educational institutions and primary health initiatives in exile, instituted vernacular media through community radio, undertook the philological revival of the Sharda script, published community magazines / periodicals , produced archival documentation of displacement and dispossession, and organised material relief for distressed populations. Their labour, situated outside formal political channels, has ensured civilisational continuity under conditions of demographic dispersion and institutional marginalisation.


Thus, whilst performative leadership has largely reproduced itself and failed to come under one umbrella and speak with one voice, it is this non-political cohort that has maintained the communal hearth. The implication is clear: in the absence of accountable elite representation, the burden of cultural and social reproduction devolves upon subaltern civil society, whose contributions remain the most durable asset of the Kashmiri Pandit community in exile

.



( Avtar Mota )





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Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

BOOK REVIEW : "SILENCE BETWEEN SNOWFLAKES : THE EXILE STORIES "

                                                                           



BOOK REVIEW

 ‘Silence Between Snowflakes: The Exile Stories’

Author: Kamal Hak

Publisher: Jeoffry and Bell Printers & Publishers, Delhi

ISBN: 978-93-5779-623-1

Extent: 219 Pages

Year of Publication: 2026

 (Presently Available on WhatsApp 09810866080.Being listed on Amazon shortly)

 

" Silence Between Snowflakes: The Exile Stories" by Kamal Hak is not a book that asks to be admired for its polish alone. Its force lies elsewhere: in witness, memory, indignation, tenderness, and the stubborn refusal to let a displaced world be tidied away into statistics. Hak writes as a Kashmiri Pandit in exile, but he does not write merely to record grievance. He writes to preserve a civilisation of gestures: the old neighbourhoods of Rainawari, the intimacy of temples and ghats, the rhythms of Herath, the informal republic of shop ledges, boat rides, family teasing, marriage anxieties, food, mourning, pride and humiliation. The result is a moving and often uncomfortable collection, one that gives the reader not a neat historical account but the emotional weather of exile.

‘Silence Between Snowflakes: The Exile Stories’ is not merely a collection of memoiristic sketches; it is an archive of grief, memory and cultural survival. In this deeply affecting volume, Kamal Hak transforms personal recollection into collective testimony, chronicling the emotional, social and spiritual consequences of the displacement of Kashmiri Pandits. The author himself states in the prologue that these are not fictional stories but lived experiences representing the post-exilic sentiments of an entire community.

Comprising approximately fifty stories, anecdotes, reflective essays, and personal memoirs, this collection repeatedly evokes the distinctive milieu of Rainawari, which emerges as a recurring and unifying presence in this collection. Readers who have lived in Rainawari will readily recognise many of the personalities, institutions, landmarks, and social spaces recalled by Hak. References to the Mandali at Bod Mandir, Chuni Wattul, Shomba Kalpush, Nika Halwoi(affectionately remembered as Lalla), and Teja Watal's cloth shop vividly resurrect the social fabric of a bygone Rainawari. The narrative is further enriched by allusions to a host of familiar figures, items, shops and places, including the demba nav (a simple, rudimentary boat), Ahad Teilwani, Vishwa Bharati, Bum Chooek, Kraalyar, Qadir Ganai, the local butcher, Chaman Lal Pandith, Nera Kak, Jagar Nath Akhoon, Rahman Kral, the potter, Moma Subziwoal, Mahi Kak's newspaper shop, Dr Prem Nath Waffa's medical store, Warris Khanun Chah, Hari Parbat, and the celebrated folk singer Gopi Nath Bhat, popularly known as Gupa Baccha. Collectively, these references serve not merely as nostalgic reminiscences but as valuable cultural markers that reconstruct the social and cultural landscape of old Rainawari, thereby enabling former residents and other readers alike to reconnect with a shared historical memory and sense of place.

The strongest quality of the book is its concreteness. Hak understands that memory becomes powerful when it is anchored in particulars. A house is not simply property; it is a room arrangement, a lane, a crowd of cousins, a kitchen left stocked in the hope of return. A temple is not merely a religious structure; it is the remembered image of a Shambu that once offered strength, later replaced by desecration and emptiness. Exile, in these pages, is not just departure from Kashmir. It is the loss of social texture. It is the inability to be cremated where one’s ancestors were cremated. It is the strange embarrassment of accepting ration packets when one’s family once gave freely. It is having a house in Delhi or Noida and still knowing, with painful clarity, that it may never become home.

Hak’s prose is at its best when he allows such details to breathe. In pieces such as ‘The House that could never become a Home’, ‘The Exile’, ‘My Shambu Has Disappeared’, ‘Opportunity of Heaven Lost in Exile’ and ‘Longing for Reunion’, he reaches a register of genuine pathos. These are not abstract laments. They are scenes of ordinary people caught in an extraordinary rupture. His grandmother’s longing to return, his own inability to reconcile comfort with belonging, and the recurring image of a homeland preserved in the mind but damaged in reality give the book its emotional centre. Here, the author deserves real credit. He knows that displacement is not finished when physical safety is achieved. It continues in language, ritual, memory, family formation, political invisibility and the private shame of needing help.

 The book is also valuable because it resists sentimental simplification. Hak’s love for Kashmir is fierce, but it is not tourist nostalgia. He is alert to the layers of fear, duplicity, social pressure and denial that shaped the Pandit experience before and after 1990. ‘First Awakening’, for example, presents humiliation well before the formal rupture of exile. ‘Kashmir: A Perennial Enigma’ and *Kashmir – Seen without a Prism’ show his continuing effort to understand contemporary Kashmir without surrendering to fashionable optimism. He is sceptical of easy reconciliations, especially those that ask victims to treat their own memories as an inconvenience. Whether the reader agrees with every political inference or not, the honesty of the author’s position is difficult to dismiss. He writes from a wound, but he does not pretend the wound is small.

At the same time, the book is not only about injury inflicted from outside. One of its more interesting dimensions is Hak’s critique of his own community. He worries about cultural thinning, social complacency, performative leadership, dowry practices, out-of-community marriages driven not only by choice but by economic and ritual pressures, and the way exile can turn solidarity into fragmentation. Pieces such as ‘The finger points at me’, ‘An apology to Turmoil’s Children’, ‘Wanted a Suitable Boy’, ‘Do Kashmiri Pandits Give Dowry?, ‘Is it all about Rainawari?’ and ‘Celebration of Destruction’ are effective because they complicate the book’s moral field. Hak is not merely accusing the world; he is also asking what the displaced have done, or failed to do, with their pain. That gives the collection a seriousness beyond complaint. It also prevents the reader from reducing the book to a single political emotion; its canvas includes ethics, inheritance, habit, loss and self-reproach.

The account of the vandalisation of the Shiva temple at Rainawari is rendered with remarkable restraint, a narrative strategy that makes the episode all the more poignant. Hak avoids rhetorical excess, recording the desecration with quiet anguish. The tragedy lies not merely in the destruction of a sacred edifice but in the profound spiritual dislocation it engenders. The disappearance of ‘Shambhu’, the temple's Shiva Linga, signifies the loss of an inner sanctuary that had sustained the author through exile. The temple's vandalisation thus becomes emblematic of a wider cultural rupture; an erosion of memory, continuity, and sacred geography, leaving behind an enduring sense of bereavement and existential loss.

 Another notable strength is the author’s words for speech. Kashmiri, Hindi and English expressions enter the narrative without apology, and this multilingual texture gives the book credibility. The reader feels that these stories have not been translated out of their cultural climate. They retain the heat of argument, the awkwardness of family conversation, the sudden intimacy of strangers, and the sharpness of public humiliation. For readers outside the community, some references may demand patience, but that is a reasonable demand. Hak is not writing a museum label for outsiders; he is writing from within a wounded inheritance.

The structure of the book is deliberately non-chronological, and this suits the subject. Exile rarely arrives in a straight line. Memory loops, interrupts, returns, contradict themselves, and then return again with greater force. The book moves between the 1970s, 1990s, later visits to Kashmir, political episodes, social gatherings, religious ceremonies and domestic conversations. At times, this creates a cumulative rhythm, like someone opening many old trunks in a single room. The same names, places and anxieties recur, but each return adds a different pressure. Rainawari becomes geography, community, symbol and accusation all at once.

Silence Between Snowflakes often feels less like a curated literary object and more like a living archive: raw, insistent, crowded, grieving, funny, irritated, devotional and defiant. Hak’s humour is one of the underrated strengths of the book. His accounts of Kashmiri food, onions, Mooli, social habits and community gatherings prevent the collection from becoming monochrome. The laughter is not decorative. It shows what exile threatened to erase: not merely land or property, but personality, wit, appetite, neighbourhood absurdity and the daily theatre of a people.

The title is well chosen. The silence in the book is not peaceful. It is the silence after abandonment, after disbelief, after failed promises, after unanswered questions. But snowflakes also suggest fragility and uniqueness. Each story is a small unit of remembered life, easily lost unless held carefully. Hak’s achievement is that he holds many such fragments long enough for the reader to feel their weight. He turns private recollection into communal testimony without entirely flattening the individuality of the people he recalls.

A notable feature is the author’s extraordinary clarity of observation. Social details are rendered with ethnographic precision: neighbourhood characters, temple rituals, culinary practices, linguistic nuances and communal interactions are described vividly. Consequently, the book serves not only as a memoir but also as a valuable cultural document preserving aspects of Kashmiri Pandit life that risk disappearance. Silence Between Snowflakes is therefore a worthy and necessary book. It may not always moderate its intensity for the reader’s comfort. But it is honest, humane, historically alert and emotionally exacting. Kamal Hak deserves praise not because he has produced a flawless work, but because he has done something more consequential: he has recorded the inner life of exile before silence can swallow it. He gives his community’s grief names, rooms, roads, rituals, arguments and voices. In doing so, he reminds us that exile is not only the story of leaving a place. It is the longer, harder story of carrying that place inside oneself, even when return has become uncertain. Silence Between Snowflakes belongs to the growing corpus of South Asian exile literature. Yet it differs from many contemporary memoirs in its insistence upon memory as moral testimony. Hak repeatedly emphasises remembrance as an ethical responsibility. This volume is not merely read; it is experienced. It lingers long after the final page, like silence itself; soft, persistent and impossible to ignore.


( Avtar Mota )


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Friday, June 19, 2026

MY SHORT STORY, "THE WEIGHT OF NOTHING"



                                                  


 The Weight of Nothing


James Whitaker occupies the corner office on the second floor, not because he built anything, but because he learned to smile at the right angle. He calls it managing up. Others call it flattery. He calls it survival. His CV is thin. His tongue is not. He remembers Martin Hale’s dog’s birthday, laughs at jokes before the punchline lands, and delivers bad news like it’s a gift wrapped in velvet. He is clever, but never serious. Seriousness would require weight, and weight would slow him down. So he floats. Up. Past engineers, past accountants, past men with twenty years of service who still believe work speaks for itself. It doesn’t. James speaks for it. He now sits second from the top. The view is good. The air is thinner.


Claire Bennett is twenty-six. She joined the company for the logo on her LinkedIn, the way people join churches for the architecture. She is competent, but competence is a crowded market. James notices her on a Tuesday. He notices the way she leans in when he talks, as if his words have gravity. They don’t. But he lets her think they do. He does not love her. He does not pretend to. He offers a transaction with the softness of a promise. “You’re wasted at your level,” he says, hand not quite touching hers. “Let me talk to Daniel. We’ll get you moved up.” She understands. Or she decides not to understand too clearly. Ambition is a fog that makes monsters look like mentors. She agrees. They meet after hours. The office is empty. The ethics policy is in a drawer somewhere, unread.


Daniel Rowe is forty-one. He keeps a framed photo of his daughter, Emily, on his desk, though he seldom looks at it. He also keeps a copy of the company’s code of conduct in his drawer, read and underlined, though he cannot say why. He believes in merit the way other men believe in weather: it simply is, and to argue with it would be absurd. When James comes to him on a Thursday, Daniel listens without blinking. “Put Claire up for promotion,” James says, all charm and inevitability. “Martin likes her. You know how it is.” Daniel opens her file. Six months in. Two missed deadlines. One HR note about argumentative tone. No merit. None. Except James’s interest, which is Martin’s interest, which is now, by the strange physics of this company, the company’s interest. He closes the file. “I can’t recommend her,” he says. His voice has no heat in it. “It’s not right. It’s not true.” James smiles. It doesn’t reach his eyes. “Think about your own review,” he says. “Martin was just asking me who’s ready for Director. I told him you were.” Daniel shrugs. He had not thought about his review. He does not think about it now. Consequences are for men who expect the world to make sense. He does not. He knows only that a lie would be a kind of death, and he is not ready to die that way. He does not think of Emily. Or he does, and it changes nothing. Truth is not negotiable, even against a child’s face.


A month later, the company restructures. The email uses words like agility and streamlining. The list of names is short. Daniel’s is on it. HR calls it redundancy. Martin avoids eye contact in the hallway. James sends a regretful note: Tough market. Nothing personal. Let me know if you need a reference. Daniel reads it once, folds it, and puts it in his pocket. He packs his desk. The photo of Emily goes into a box. The code of conduct stays in the drawer. No one will read it. He leaves without saying goodbye. Goodbyes imply a future, and he is not interested in futures.


James gets his coffee. He looks out the second-floor window. Claire gets her promotion on Friday. She does not look at him when she passes his office. She looks at the floor. Or maybe through it.


That night, Daniel sits in his car and does not turn the key. It has begun to rain. He thinks: I did the right thing. The thought is not warm. It is not cold. It is simply there, like the rain on the windscreen. He was called the spine. Spines are removed all the time. The organism keeps moving. He had refused because refusal was the only action that did not feel like acting. He did not calculate the mortgage, or Emily’s school fees, or his wife’s silence at dinner. To calculate would have been to weigh truth against something else, and he does not know how to put truth on a scale. He suffers, but the suffering is quiet, almost indifferent. He accepts it the way he accepts the rain. He will not appeal. He will not explain. The absurdity is not that he was fired. The absurdity is that anyone thought he would do otherwise.


James, for his part, feels nothing. Not guilt, not victory. Only a faint boredom, the kind that comes after a meal that was too rich. He had assured Martin that Daniel was not a culture fit. Martin had nodded. Martin likes harmony. James provides harmony. Claire sits in her new cubicle. The title is heavier than she expected. She opens her laptop. The screen lights up her face. She is not sure if she climbed or was lifted. She is not sure if there’s a difference.


None of them resign. None of them confess. The company releases its quarterly report. Profits are up. Martin thanks the team in the all-hands. James claps. Outside, the rain keeps falling. The building does not notice. The second-floor window reflects only the sky, empty and grey and indifferent. Each of them, in their own way, has become what the company needed them to be. Daniel, alone, has become what he was. And for him, that is enough. Or it is nothing. He does not measure the difference.


( Avtar Mota )


PS



Critical Commentary on Avtar Mota's new short story : "The Weight of Nothing "


This is not a story about a redundancy. It is a study in corporate metaphysics. Mota strips the office of its beige carpet and fluorescent sympathy, and shows us a vacuum where ethics, gravity, and meaning ought to be. The piece is lean, diagnostic, and deliberately cold. It refuses catharsis. That refusal is its point.

The title  invokes Sartre and Camus without naming them. James Whitaker “floats” because he is weightless ,  no substance, no conviction, no ethical mass. He rises in the same way a helium balloon does: by being empty. Daniel Rowe is his inverse. He has weight. He calls it a spine. The company calls it redundancy. 

Daniel’s refusal to recommend Claire is not heroism. It is absurd fidelity. “Truth is not negotiable, even against a child’s face.” That line does Camus’s work: the choice to live without appeal, to act without hope of coherence. He does not calculate mortgage or school fees because “to calculate would have been to weigh truth against something else, and he does not know how to put truth on a scale.” He is Sisyphus who refuses to pretend the rock is light. The punishment is exile. The victory, if it exists, is that he does not notice the difference between enough and  nothing.

Mota understands that the truly existential moment isn’t a grand speech. It’s Daniel sitting in a car, not turning the key, watching rain. “The thought is not warm. It is not cold. It is simply there.” Indifference as moral achievement.

None of these people are round characters. They are principles in suits. James is the logic of the institution made flesh: charm as currency, flattery as strategy, harmony as a euphemism for compliance. “He now sits second from the top. The view is good. The air is thinner.” The metaphor is perfect. Height without oxygen. Status without substance.
Claire is not villain or victim. She is the fog of ambition. “She is not sure if she climbed or was lifted. She is not sure if there’s a difference.”That single sentence captures how systems dissolve agency. The promotion is heavier than she expected because it isn’t hers. It’s James’s. It’s Martin’s. It’s the company’s.

Daniel is not good. He is exact. He underlines the code of conduct “though he cannot say why.”He believes in merit “the way other men believe in weather.” He isn’t moralising; he is constituted by a rule. When the rule and the world conflict, he does not bend. He breaks. Quietly.

Martin Hale, barely on stage, is the most damning figure: the boss who “likes harmony” and therefore outsources ethics to James. He doesn’t fire Daniel. He allows the organism to expel the spine.

The prose is surgical. Short sentences. No adverbs. No pleas to the reader. Mota uses corporate diction against itself: “agility and streamlining”, “culture fit”, “tough market”. The clichés are displayed like specimens. They are dead words that kill live people.

The imagery is elemental and hostile: floating, rain, grey sky, thin air. The building “does not notice.” The window “reflects only the sky, empty and grey and indifferent.” Pathetic fallacy is denied. The universe isn’t cruel. It’s unconcerned. So is the quarterly report. Dialogue is weaponised. James’s “Nothing personal” lands precisely because it is personal. Daniel’s silence is louder than argument. The only quoted promise  “Let me talk to Daniel”  is a lie inside a transaction.

This story sits in a tradition. You hear Orwell’s “politics is the choice between the lesser evil” inverted: here the lesser evil is choosing nothing. You hear Kafka’s The Trial,  where the rules are opaque but the penalty is clear. You hear Camus’s The Plague, where decency is “doing one’s job” without reward. But the closest kin is possibly George Saunders’s corporate satires, stripped of Saunders’s warmth. Mota gives you no ironic cushion. You don’t laugh. You nod.

The piece also interrogates a modern heresy: that work speaks for itself. Daniel believes it. The story demonstrates that work is mute unless ventriloquised by James. In that sense, the story is about language. James speaks. Daniel reads. One floats. One files.

The last paragraph is the verdict: “None of them resign. None of them confess. The company releases its quarterly report. Profits are up.” The system is not evil. It is functional. It has excised the one part that created friction. “The organism keeps moving.” That is the horror. Not that Daniel suffers, but that his suffering is irrelevant.

“Daniel, alone, has become what he was. And for him, that is enough. Or it is nothing. He does not measure the difference.” That is the final, bleak calculus. In a world of performance reviews, Daniel refuses to be reviewed, even by himself. Mota does not ask you to admire Daniel or hate James. He asks you to notice that the building, like the sky, is indifferent. And that, in such a world, the weight of nothing might be the only weight worth carrying.

(  Review by a University Teacher ) 



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Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

THE PIZZA THAT BEGAN WITH FLOUR


                               








The Pizza That Began with Flour

 

One sunny afternoon in Paris, my son announced that he would make a special pizza for us. Rather than ordering one from a restaurant, he wanted to create it entirely by hand, from the dough to the toppings. It was an ambitious plan, but he was determined to prepare a meal that would bring the whole family together around the dining table.

The journey began with a visit to a local market. Carefully selecting a bag of fine farine( flour ), he imagined the pizza that would emerge from it. Back at home, he laid out the ingredients on the kitchen counter: flour, water, yeast, salt, tomato sauce, fresh basil leaves, and creamy mozzarella. Each ingredient seemed ordinary on its own, yet together they promised something wonderful. The first task was to make the dough. Into a large bowl went the flour, followed by water and yeast. With steady hands, he mixed everything together until a rough dough formed. Then came the hard work. He kneaded the dough patiently, pressing, folding, and turning it again and again. The kitchen filled with a sense of purpose as the sticky mixture gradually transformed into a smooth, silky ball. When he was satisfied, he placed the dough in a lightly oiled bowl and covered it carefully. Now came the most difficult part: waiting. The dough would rest overnight.

As evening turned to night and the lights of Paris twinkled beyond the windows, the dough quietly performed its magic. While everyone slept, the yeast worked tirelessly. Tiny bubbles formed throughout the dough, giving it strength and character. By morning, what had started as a simple mixture of flour and water had doubled in size and become light, airy and full of promise. The next day, he lifted the cover and smiled. The dough had risen beautifully. Gently, he tipped it onto the work surface and shaped it with care. Rather than rushing, he stretched it slowly, allowing it to find its natural shape. The round base grew larger and thinner until it looked ready for its toppings.

Meanwhile, tomato sauce was kept handy, fresh basil leaves were washed and set aside, their sweet aroma filling the kitchen. The mozzarella was torn into soft pieces, ready to melt into creamy pools of flavour. The pizza began to take shape. A layer of tomato sauce was spread across the dough. The mozzarella followed, scattered generously across the surface. Finally, the basil leaves were added, bringing a burst of colour and the unmistakable scent of an Italian summer.

When everything was ready, the pizza was carefully placed into the hot oven. Soon, the kitchen was transformed. The aroma of baking bread drifted through the house. The scent of roasting tomatoes mingled with the fragrance of basil. The mozzarella softened and bubbled gently, while the crust slowly turned golden and crisp around the edges. Everyone found themselves wandering into the kitchen, drawn by the irresistible smell. There were curious glances through the oven door and eager questions about how much longer it would take. The anticipation grew with every passing minute.

At last, the moment arrived. The pizza emerged from the oven looking magnificent. The crust was beautifully golden, the mozzarella glistened in creamy white patches, the tomato sauce too looked elegant on the surface, and the basil leaves had released their wonderful fragrance. It looked like something from a traditional pizzeria, yet it had been created entirely at home. With great care, he carried the pizza to the dining table. For a moment, we simply admired it. It represented far more than flour, tomato sauce, basil and cheese. It was the result of patience, effort and love, the reward for a process that had begun the previous day with a simple bag of flour and a desire to make something special for his family.

As the pizza was sliced, the cheese stretched into long ribbons. Conversation filled the room, accompanied by smiles and laughter. The first bite confirmed what everyone had hoped: the crust was crisp on the outside and soft within, the tomatoes were sweet and rich, the basil fresh and fragrant, and the mozzarella wonderfully creamy.

That evening in Paris, the meal became a cherished memory. What started with a handful of flour and an overnight rise ended with a family gathered around a table, sharing not only a delicious pizza but also the joy of something lovingly made by hand. The pizza disappeared slice by slice, but the story of how it came to life remained long after the last crumb had gone. It was a simple meal, yet it carried something priceless, the warmth of family and the love with which it had been made.

 

(Avtar Mota )




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